
9 minute read
Design & Build
by PSI Media
Building an efficient education estate
LocatED was launched in 2017 to support the Department for Education with the delivery of its free schools programme by buying sites quickly and at best value. Lara Newman, chief executive of LocatED, shares what the organisation has a achieved and how its work has evolved over the years
LocatED was launched in 2017 to support the Department for Education (DfE) with the delivery of its free schools programme; buying sites quickly and at best value, proactively managing sites not currently in use, and selling surplus sites.
Over the past five years, our work has grown to include the delivery of innovative education-led mixed-use developments, strategic property advice to public bodies and the education sector, and estate efficiency and improvement initiatives for schools and colleges.
Through all of this, we support the government in building an efficient, world-class education estate – for communities today and in the future.
Securing sites for new free schools To date, we have acquired more than 200 sites, creating in excess of 100,000 potential school places for children across England. Our regionally based Acquisitions Team draws on its extensive property experience, local knowledge, and network of commercial contacts to negotiate at pace. We consider sites that can deliver temporary school buildings as small as a few thousand feet, to permanent buildings upwards of 120,000 sq. ft. We don’t dictate the acreage of sites because we can – and have – delivered free schools over multiple storeys on constrained sites. Since 2017 we have broadened the types of properties which can be used for schools and have been involved with some really creative redevelopments.
London Screen Academy (LSA), for example, is a sixth form free school for up to 1,000 students, founded by some of the UK’s most successful film producers. It is now housed in an incredible 85,000 sq. ft. former 1920s radio and television factory in Islington. Despite the site’s potential, it had been vacant for a number of years before it was acquired and
eventually used for LSA. We oversaw the redevelopment of this building, working closely with contractors and Architecture Initiative to preserve the heritage façade while undertaking a significant reconfiguration of the industrial interior; stripping back to the internal frame of the building, and forming a new three-storey professional film production studio with supporting facilities such as hair and makeup rooms and professional sound studios, surrounded by teaching and workshop spaces that are truly versatile and flexible. The project was named refurbishment of the year at the Education Estates Awards 2020, recognising the difference it has made to the educational experience. Converting buildings As well as acquiring land and buildings, LocatED manages the delivery of education-led mixed-use schemes for education Houlton School is another example of a non-educational building being converted for education use. In 2020, we secured a Grade II listed former radio station for this project. The secondary academy is part of the Houlton development in Rugby, which will see Urban & Civic deliver almost 6,000 homes alongside neighbourhood and community facilities. Our in-house technical and planning experts provided crucial early advice on heritage considerations to support the sensitive transformation of this historic building into a modern and inspiring learning environment, delivered by Urban & Civic. The school, which opened in September 2021, E
is complemented with new buildings. This includes a purpose-built sports centre, dance and acting studios, and a state-of-the-art communications centre, fully resourced with a professional radio and television broadcasting station to continue the historic legacy of the site.
The project has been recognised with four awards this year, including Project of the Year (Construction News Awards) and Best Use of Heritage in Placemaking (Planning Awards).
Delivering schools and housing through innovative mixed‑use schemes As well as acquiring land and buildings, we manage the delivery of education-led mixed-use schemes to support the efficient and cost-effective provision of new schools. These developments can make it viable to create much-needed schools in dense urban areas, where the cost of land might otherwise be too high. Typically, these schemes include a residential development on the same site and the sale of the homes can be used to offset some or all of the cost of the new school.
We currently have five mixed-use developments in progress; three secondary schools creating thousands of new school places, and two special schools which will deliver vital education provision in their local communities. In total, these schemes will provide more than 500 homes, a proportion of which will be affordable accommodation.
Our first mixed-use scheme to complete, the award-winning Fulham Boys’ School (FBS), opened its doors to pupils last year. The new permanent home for FBS was delivered on an extremely constrained inner-city site, as part of a development with police facilities and apartments. It was crucial, given the site’s limited size, to maximise the learning and play spaces through creative design and efficient space planning. The result is a high quality 800-place secondary school designed by Architecture Initiative, with a 4.3m deep basement housing a three-court sports hall, a performance studio and theatre space, enabling more of the plot to be retained as an outdoor courtyard and play area.

Unlocking potential in existing school sites England’s school estate is vast, with many buildings from the
1950s, 1960s and 1970s. The department has allocated over £13 billion since 2015 to improve the condition of schools. In addition, the School Rebuilding Programme will transform buildings at 500 schools over the next decade. To maximise opportunities to go further, we work with the DfE to explore ways of unlocking the potential in existing school sites to address capital need through a range of estate efficiency initiatives.
In 2018, we launched the Surplus Land for Housing Pilot with the DfE, to explore how to reconfigure a selection of school properties with surplus buildings or land in areas of high housing need. The aim was to unlock funds for reinvestment in school buildings and sports facilities while releasing land for housing. Linked to this is ‘building up’, where we have identified schools with condition need in areas where the residential values can enable homes to be built above a newly constructed school, to self-fund projects and minimise the loss of outdoor play space.
One of the projects identified through our estate efficiency work is an ambitious mixed-use development in Lewisham which will deliver a fully funded, brand new primary school with an increased play area, together with around 90 homes (including affordable housing) above the school. which have been acquired for new schools and are awaiting development to begin. These sites are typically vacant, and we manage them until responsibility is transferred to a contractor for works, or to a school trust when it is ready to open on the site. Our Asset Management Team ensures these properties are safe, secure, and meet statutory compliance. The team also delivers ‘meanwhile uses’ for vacant sites, which either support the local community or generate income to help offset holding costs, while retaining flexibility for the properties’ future intended use. Examples include flexible and affordable workspaces to support SMEs, car parking schemes, guardian schemes to provide affordable accommodation in areas of need, and film shoots. We also open sites for community use, and during the pandemic we worked with the NHS to use vacant buildings as vaccination centres in Hastings, Derby, Heathrow, Liverpool, and Letchworth.
Looking forward, LocatED will continue to support the delivery of the free schools programme, make additional efficiencies and improvements to the education estate, and contribute to cross-government initiatives such as levelling up and the provision of housing in England. L
Proactive asset management We oversee a rolling portfolio of around 90 sites owned by the DfE, FURTHER INFORMATION
www.located.co.uk
The Fulham Boys’ School, image credit: Tony McAteer and Gleeds
Advertisement Feature Clearing – and monitoring – the air

Sick Building Syndrome, the term first defined by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in the 1980s, is now widely recognised. More recently, we have become even more aware of the need for fresh air due to the arrival of COVID. Despite the cold weather of two successive winters, we have become used to throwing open the windows and doors of school buildings at regular intervals to allow fresh air to circulate and to maintain a healthy indoor air atmosphere.
However, as the pandemic recedes and we learn to live with Coronavirus, and against a backdrop of alarming domestic fuel prices, we are returning to closed doors and windows, with greater reliance on ventilation systems. The monitoring of indoor air quality has once again become a pressing issue.
We know that students learn and concentrate more effectively in better quality indoor air, so we should once again be looking at indoor air monitoring as a key building services issue. The Building Engineering Services Association (BESA) highlighted the growing problem by publishing a guidance document, titled ‘A beginner’s guide to indoor air quality’ – 2021. This gives expert advice, stressing the importance of proactively testing indoor air quality, or IAQ, as it is now commonly known.
Healthy indoor air is defined as air that is predominantly free from airborne pollutants, while unhealthy indoor air may contain concerning levels of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, particulate matter (PM), Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs), Radon gas, mould and humidity.
Indoor air quality is important for staff as well as students. There is currently no specific legal requirement to test IAQ, but there is a responsibility to provide employees with a safe workplace under The Workplace (Health, Safety & Welfare) Regulations, and The Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulations.
The first step should be an indoor air quality survey, with spot-check monitoring being conducted in numerous representative locations throughout the building(s). Appropriately trained and experienced air quality surveyors should assess your property’s IAQ, measuring various relevant parameters which may be of concern.
A full report of your survey should follow, along with advice on any measures needed to address specific issues.
The WHO estimates that some 30 per cent of new and refurbished buildings suffer from a degree of Sick Building Syndrome, so it is becoming increasingly important, especially for the sake of occupants, to test and monitor your indoor air quality regularly.
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